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Post by gbang on Apr 19, 2006 21:42:39 GMT 1
Regissøren av Silent Hill (som jeg tror noen gleder seg til), Christophe Gans, velger sine topp 7 (ja riktig TMwtP ;D) skrekkfilmer her. Dette er en registrerside så om du ikke ønsker å lese LA Times ofte kan det være lurt å bruke www.bugmenot.com/Bra valg på lista hans, og jeg er spesielt glad for å se både Deep Red og Dawn of the Dead der da de også har blitt personlige favoritter.
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Post by TMwtP on Apr 19, 2006 22:21:17 GMT 1
LOL!! Han har faktisk valgt 7 - syv - filmer! Nei og nei, dette var jo kult.
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Post by sharkbait on Apr 19, 2006 22:43:57 GMT 1
Men han har feil Carpenter-film på lista si! Det skulle selvfølgelig vært The Thing fremfor Prince of Darkness... "Idiotar! Det ær ikke en bikkje! Den bare immiterer en bikkje!"
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Post by fredut on Apr 20, 2006 17:06:52 GMT 1
Kunne noen rett og slett poste lista hans her (jeg vet jeg er lat)?
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Post by gbang on Apr 20, 2006 17:15:08 GMT 1
Med fare for å bli saksøkt :-D
1. "The Haunting" Robert Wise, 1963 My favorite horror movie of all time. It was made by Robert Wise — the same guy who directed "West Side Story" and was the editor for Orson Welles. It is still the most frightening movie ever made because we don't see anything. Everything is created by camera angle and sound.
2. "Deep Red" Dario Argento, 1976 For me this is the first horror movie that feels like a piece of modern art. It is important to consider that the horror movies should — like modern art — not have a too obvious meaning. When you watch them it is more important what you feel than what you understand. "Deep Red" really opened that.
3. "The Innocents" Jack Clayton, 1961 A beautiful adaptation by Jack Clayton of "The Turn of the Screw" with Deborah Kerr about the corruption of two children by a ghost. A very classic movie, beautifully done.
4. "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" Tobe Hooper, 1974 The first real American horror film. It defined the kind of horror a great country like America can produce. Many horror movies were produced in America before, but they were inspired by classic literature, it was not this pure American flavor. For me it is the real American horror movie, in terms of how it defined a country.
5. "Dawn of the Dead" George Romero, 1978 It is a pure American movie like "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" that uses fear of zombies to make a big social statement. It was the first horror movies that critics recognized and took seriously, and that was a very important moment for people who love horror film.
6. "Prince of Darkness" John Carpenter, 1987 It's a beautiful movie in a way because it is a very abstract movie — completely abstract. It was produced almost the same year as "Blue Velvet" by David Lynch, and they both lead the audience into abstraction. It is something that is difficult to explain, something that you feel. It was a new step in horror film.
7. "Ringu" Hideo Nakata, 1998 It's basically the movie that restarted the genre recently. We had the feeling that nothing new was coming, and then we saw this film from Japan. It is an amazing movie because it is basically a melodrama. In Japan horror film are made for a female audience, so this movie has opened the genre towards the female audience and today the horror genre is very feminine.
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Post by fredut on Apr 21, 2006 15:29:40 GMT 1
Hr. Gans er ikke tapt bak en vogn, skjønner jeg! Det skjønte jeg forsåvidt da jeg så Crying Freeman og Brotherhood of the Wolf også. Enig med Sharkbait at Thing fortjente PoD's plass. Den der på 3. plass har jeg ikke sett, sikkert verdt å lukte på.
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